Mini Modern: New 495-square-foot L.A. house
Tenant Joshua Selsky walks toward the kitchen, hidden behind a white room divider that doubles as a projection screen. Natural light spills into the main living-dining area from three sides. Douglas fir wall panels on the left keep media equipment tucked out of sight. - by Emily Young
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)Designer Louis Molina of Good Idea Studio calls it “the smallest new house in Echo Park,” an L.A. house that uses its 495 square feet quite creatively for maximum effect on a minimal footprint. The goal: “enriched living, not impoverished living.”
Another view of the main space, with the kitchen on the left. Doors and windows are framed in warm wood. The “floating” kitchen partition of white-painted light density fiberboard, or LDF, is supported by square tube steel posts from Industrial Metal Supply. The partition serves as pot and pan storage and buffet counter.
The coffee table rests on a polished concrete floor. Simple materials were used to save money and provide stylish continuity from room to room.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)The set on the right is shorter but equally effective, bringing light and air into the living room and making the space larger than it really is. That’s the building’s owner, John Oddo, sliding the Douglas fir-trimmed doors.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)The reverse view. Note the dining table around the corner, on the right.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)That dining table sits right outside the kitchen.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)In the bedroom, the courtyard’s tranquil blue stucco continues inside the house, helping to erase the boundary between inside and out -- and seeming to expand the space.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)Small bath with a sink bowl on top of a vanity leaves more under–sink storage.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)Oddo, the house’s owner, inside the bedroom. By the time the house was completed in 2009, the recession forced him to rent out the new space. Selsky answered Oddo’s ad on Craigslist and, after one walk-through, snapped up the rental for $1,600 a month.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)Strategically placed stucco walls provide welcome refuge from the busy street and from neighbors, allowing for a secluded courtyard. The lockable steel-framed front gate with half-inch-thick frosted acrylic maintains privacy and security, so that all doors of the house can be left open to capture refreshing breezes.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)